Fr. 192.00

Napoleon's American Prisoners

English · Hardback

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Description

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Tells the story of the 1,500 or so common seamen of the American merchant marine who were held as prisoners of war in France during the Napoleonic Wars.

Based on extensive original research, this book tells the story of the 1,500 or so common seamen of the American merchant marine who were held as prisoners of war in France during the Napoleonic Wars. Although the United States was neutral, Napoleon interpreted neutrality narrowly, and included among the enemy merchants doing business with the enemy and seamen working on enemy vessels. Drawing on remarkably full source material in French, American and British archives, including the seamen's letters, their pleas for help to the consuls, the correspondence about them between the French authorities and the US diplomatic service, and the British Admiralty lists of prisoners, the book reveals a great deal about who these seamen were, and about their vastly different experience in French prisons. It contrasts their fate with that of British seamen and officers, discusses the labyrinthine maritime laws that ensnared the seamen and how their nationality, in an era before passports, was determined, charts the establishment of the US consular service, first established at this time to help "distressed American seamen", and relates the American seamen's experiences to the wider scholarly literature. Throughout, the book includes fascinating case studies of the adventures and misadventures of individual seamen.

List of contents










Acknowledgements
Introduction

Part One - From Merchant Seaman to Prisoner of War
1. The Early Republic Merchant Seaman
2. Sailing into Europe's Wars
3. Captives

Part Two - Trapped in a Thorny Maze
4. The French in Control
5. The American Diplomats in France
6. A Seaman's Citizenship

Part Three - Élargissement - Release
7. "Bad Prizes", Passengers and Compassion
8. Trading Information for Freedom
9. Fighting for the French
10. Negotiated Releases

Conclusion
Epilogue
Appendices
Appendix A - American Prisoners Who Were Released
Appendix B - American Prisoners Who Escaped
Appendix C - American Prisoners Who Died in France
Bibliographic Essay
Primary Sources
Bibliography

About the author










ANNE MORDDEL, a retired librarian, archivist and British Council consultant, has published extensively on American seamen and on genealogical research, including as the author of The French Genealogy Blog.

Summary

Tells the story of the 1,500 or so common seamen of the American merchant marine who were held as prisoners of war in France during the Napoleonic Wars.

Product details

Authors Anne Morddel
Publisher Boydell & Brewer
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 17.06.2025
 
EAN 9781837651160
ISBN 978-1-83765-116-0
No. of pages 294
Dimensions 156 mm x 234 mm x 18 mm
Weight 590 g
Subject Non-fiction book > History > Miscellaneous

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